Summary
- Supermarket chain Tuskys loaned its rival Nakumatt Holdings Sh50 million in a bid to rescue the company, according to records seen by the Business Daily.
- A report by Nakumatt’s administrator PKF Kenya shows that the Tuskys loan was among the cash inflows at the bankrupt retailer in the period between January 22, 2018 and November 30, 2019. It was not clear whether Nakumatt repaid the loan.
- Nakumatt went into administration on January 22, 2018 after defaulting on suppliers and banks, throwing it into an existential crisis.
Supermarket chain Tuskys loaned its rival Nakumatt Holdings Sh50
million in a bid to rescue the company, according to records seen by
the Business Daily.
A report by Nakumatt’s
administrator PKF Kenya shows that the Tuskys loan was among the cash
inflows at the bankrupt retailer in the period between January 22, 2018
and November 30, 2019. It was not clear whether Nakumatt repaid the
loan.
Nakumatt went into administration on January 22,
2018 after defaulting on suppliers and banks, throwing it into an
existential crisis.
Tuskys provided the loan as part of
its plans to acquire a stake in Nakumatt. The parties in 2017 notified
the Competition Authority of Kenya (CAK) of their plans to merge but the
regulator rejected the application, notifying them that providing loans
does not amount to a merger.
Tuskys had also proposed to offer management services to Nakumatt.
CAK had invited the two parties to submit a fresh merger
application but four months later, in April 2018, Tuskys lawyers wrote
to the regulator to communicate that it was re-considering its interest
in the deal.
The retailer later pulled out, saying its
was opposed to the proposals Nakumatt’s court-appointed administrator
had presented to creditors at a meeting.
The
administrator’s report, however, shows that Tuskys made a new bid on
November 5, 2019 to buy Nakumatt’s assets at its remaining six branches
for Sh70 million.
It was the lowest bid and was vastly surpassed by Naivas Limited which had the highest offer of Sh422.5 million.
The
Tuskys loan represented 1.2 percent of the total Sh4.1 billion cash
inflow at Nakumatt in the 22 months. It was the third largest item after
asset sales (Sh185.9 million) and debt collection (Sh3.9 billion).
The
largest cash outflow in the review period was supplier payments (Sh2.6
billion) followed by operating expenses (Sh799.3 million) and landlord
payments (Sh586.2 million).
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